They stay in the hive, clumping together for warmth.
2006-12-20 19:07:17
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answer #1
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answered by Star 5
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There are many worthy answers on here, but after extensive research I have the definitive answer:
It is well known that bees like to stay warm over winter, but here in the UK with temperatures set to drop below zero, the jet-setting bee has to go abroad to catch some warmer weather.
Worker bees usually go somewhere cheap like Lanzarote.
Middle class bees will go a bit more upmarket, say Sharm el Sheikh, or maybe the Bahamas
However, Royal Bees will want the utmost in luxury and will stay at the 7 star Burj al Arab hotel in Dubai.
2006-12-20 23:38:26
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answer #2
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answered by feeltherisingbuzz 4
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In the summer a worker bee only lives for about 40 days. As no young are raised over the winter months, the workers born in the autumn will live until the following spring. A queen can live up to 5 years however for the beekeeper a queen is passed her prime in her third year.
2006-12-20 19:13:32
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answer #3
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answered by shelz042000 3
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I'm no expert but I can answer it better than what's here so far. There are lots of different species of bees different species do different things in the winter. Also the same species might do different things in different geographies and climates. Honey bees do not hibernate, what do you think they've been making all that honey for? To eat through the winter. The male bees (drones) get kicked out of the hive before winter and freeze to death, they are not worth feeding through the winter. There are some species of bees in some parts of the world that do migrate on a seasonal basis, and some species (sometimes just the queen) will hibernate in the winter. Or sometimes all the adult bees die off in winter and eggs overwinter somewhere protected.
Honeybees, again, though overwinter in the hive feeding on their harvest of honey taking care of the queen cleaning the hive etc. Of course the boy bees get kicked out on thier lazy stingerless bums to freeze.
2006-12-20 19:23:11
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answer #4
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answered by Ted H 3
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2016-12-20 14:01:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Bees do hibernate in a tight group with the Queen at the center. They die if it is too cold for the workers to protect the Queen.
I can tell you with certainty that there are many more bees in England than Canada as a result of the severe Canadian winters.
2006-12-20 19:26:14
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answer #6
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answered by tekni 2
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They hang out in their little bee and wasp houses and hibernate... then wake up when it warms up...
And some actually remain active in areas that don't get unduly cold - in N. CA, they pop up from time to time during the winter, then disappear again when its cold...
They're bright little buggers.
-dh
2006-12-20 19:07:54
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answer #7
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answered by delicateharmony 5
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They fly south to somewhere in south america....there they drink too much, do something stupid and go to jail. Then they come back again during spring with a crazy south american prison tan (yellow and black). Doesn't that explain a lot?
2006-12-20 19:09:47
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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my ex wife's grandmother is a bee keeper, and i asked her the same question. the little buggers hibernate!!
2006-12-20 19:05:34
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answer #9
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answered by wrldzgr8stdad 4
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these little creatures r smart n hard working.it stores foods in the hive before winter.so it won't get starvation.
best wishes.
2006-12-20 19:18:48
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answer #10
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answered by robert KS LEE. 6
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